PARIS, Oct 27 (AFP) - A Frenchman accused of smuggling antiquities
out of Egypt on Tuesday denied he was on the run, two days
after his trial resumed in Alexandria in his absence.
His lawyer had
said Sunday his whereabouts are unknown.
"I'm in Cairo,"
Stephane Rousseau, 43, told public France 2 television in
a telephone interview late Tuesday.
He had been arrested
at Cairo airport in August 2003 after customs officers found
several terracotta figurines and 158 coins in his luggage,
and went on trial in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria
in March.
Prosecutors charge
that the items were antiquities whose export was banned under
a 1983 law against smuggling, but the defence insists they
were cheap copies that Rousseau picked up in curio shops.
He was freed on
an USD 800 bail in May after eight months in detention, but
his passport was seized by the Egyptian authorities who slapped
him with a travel ban.
His last known
address was at Alexandria's Union Hotel but his lawyer Samira
Sufian said the Frenchman was reported to have checked out
several weeks ago.
"He sent an
email to his family a month ago in which he seemed delirious,
which was very worrying, and since then nothing," Sufian
told AFP.
"Since last
June, Rousseau had refused any contact with his defence and
was suspicious of his own family because he was afraid of
being thrown back into jail. He had stopped answering his
emails," she said.
But in the interview
with France 2, Rousseau said, "I'm not on the run (...)
My lawyers told me that I shouldn't bother attending"
the trial.
The French embassy
in Cairo has refused to comment on the fate of the Frenchman,
who before his arrest had a job making sketches for a French
archaeological team headed by Jean-Yves Empereur and working
in
Alexandria harbour.
On Sunday, the
prosecution said it was examining a new expert report on the
nature and value of the seized artefacts.
Rousseau's defence
had rejected an earlier report, arguing it had been drawn
by the state's antiquities department and not by independent
experts.
Egypt's supreme
council of antiquities has been cracking down on smuggling
rings in recent months. Hundreds of precious artefacts are
thought to be spirited out of Egypt each year.
Sufian said the
trial had been adjourned again Sunday in the absence of the
defendant and would resume on December 29 this year.
Rousseau started
coming on missions to Egypt in 1992.
The bounty seized
when he tried to board a flight back to Paris in August 2003
included coins spanning several centuries, "ushabti"
figurines which used to be buried with the dead during the
antiquity, ancient Coptic lamps and other artefacts.
Empereur has in
the past spoken out against Rousseau, accusing him of theft.
But Sufian argued
that the Ushabti were replicas Rousseau bought at the Al-Gomaa
market in Alexandria and that her client was deceived.
The exact origin
of the antiquities Rousseau allegedly tried to smuggle out
of Egypt remains unclear. The Frenchman, who is not an archaeologist,
was never involved in the Alexandria excavations and is
not believed to have had access to storage.
© AFP